Preview

Zen Of Housework

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
964 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Zen Of Housework
It is a fact of life that everyone will need to do housework, even if there are a million other things they would rather be doing. For some people, it seems to be a miserable or tedious endeavor. Perhaps it would be more enjoyable thinking about housework as an opportunity to lose us in another new world. “The Zen of Housework” by Al Zolynas is a wonderful poem about finding the sacred in those most ordinary tasks. Seeing the kind of sacred in Al’s housecleaning also requires a great sense of humor. The poem captures the moment of the author’s dishwashing to be the most enjoyable and extraordinary moment in life. The title of the poem, “The Zen of Housework” also suggests a degree of meaning. The word “Zen” always relates to a peaceful …show more content…
There are his “pink rubber gloves” and “dinner dishes” that reflect his action at the moment. There is “the window above the sink,” the sun, the sparrows, and the branches. He also ingeniously describes the droplets. “They sway, changing directions constantly – like a school of playful fish.” There is also the sheer curtain leading to another world. Al Zolynas makes the short moment of washing dishes become more vivid. Everything surroundings has their own action, their own moments. Moreover, the way of looking out the window reminds me a lot about meditation, when we try to feel the surroundings using our six senses, when we have an insight into nature and when we can enjoy every single thing around us. The great things about the poem are not the actions and the scene themselves, but the author’s imagination that inspires the …show more content…
There are many verbs such as “moiling”, “domesticity”, and “mundane,” those are hidden references to doing housework. Perhaps doing housework is not an easy job to do. The word “moiling” creates a negative feeling toward dish washing. This is the beginning of every housework chores. They all create a dull feeling at first. However, Al Zolynas has creatively turned the task into something more artistic, “It breaks the surface like a chalice rising from a medieval lake” or “Full of the grey wine of domesticity, the glass floats to the level of my eyes”. Al makes the readers feel that he is enjoying something, not doing anything. The wine glass is full of grey liquid, maybe because it is filled with dirty water from the sink full of dinner dishes. But for Al Zolynas, it is a beauty of nature. He uses the words “chalice”, “goblet” for his wine glass, making it more sacred, more mystery and therefore more unique. The glass rising from the “medieval lake,” we can even feel that it is shinning vividly. The word “grey” makes us think about old and earthy. However, the word “wine” reminds us of a delicious drink that give a highly pleasant to taste. Al Zolynas repeatedly using “grey wine” give the reader some special feeling. Although it is grey, it is just a normal liquid, normal thing, it still can bring out a delectable pleasant to taste. Everything quickly turns from ordinary to extraordinary, to another

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    As the narrator remembers past scenes, he writes, “Brushstrokes flash, a red bird’s/wings cutting across my stare” (22-23). The author recalls memories from the battles, and he retells them as if they are a beautiful piece of art, although the reality is brutal. By envisioning traumatic scenes in a different light, the narrator infers that even the darkest scenes can be viewed with warm energy. When the persona glances into the reflective wall, he explains, “My clouded reflection eyes me/like a bird of prey, the profile of the night/slanted against the morning” (6-8). The author compares night and morning, which puts light against darkness. Although the narrator came with sorrow for all of the lives lost in the Vietnam War, he still sees the hopeful aspect among the grief. No matter what the situation is, hope is always present within one’s darkest…

    • 835 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    C.D. Wright uses her incredible skill to create a strong impression through not only the structure of the poem but also her word choice used throughout the poem which clouds the reader in a mysterious atmosphere. The mastery of the…

    • 356 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The reader is slowly let in on more of an image throughout the poem. The first few sentences are barely descriptive, but it goes beyond adjectives only a few rows down. After they have been zipped up in their plastic tombs;…

    • 678 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When one examines the title "The Interior Decorator" one may think of a career which involves garnishing one's home in style to make for a more pleasant atmosphere or an atmosphere that is conducive to the personality of the person living within that home. However, upon closer examination, one may realize another meaning. "Interior decorator" is a term which is more symbolic and describes an "art"of personality. The first stanza holds clues. "..but under/These ornate surfaces, the hard/Naked wood is still there." Two symbols are introduced here. The ornate surfaces describe a pleasant and cheerful countenance while under this image a hardened spirit lies underneath. Stanza four reaffirms this position.…

    • 598 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The second stanza tells of slamming doors, angry feet, and slamming dishes. This portrays the behavior of a schizophrenic person. It is reckless for no reason. This is a symptom called "catatonia" CITATION Psy14 \l 1033 (Psych Central), which is when the subject moves excessively and has violent behavior. The greasy stains spreading on the cloth is imagery for disease spreading over the body.…

    • 722 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In conclusion, in the book Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson a major life lesson is taught through the masterful manipulation of tone, mood and plot events that apprises the reader with the knowledge that if any problem seems impassable it is ok and even beneficial to end your life or…

    • 724 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    An example of this would be lines 34-37 when the waitress describes the indoor environment as, “only another white square waiting to be filled like the desire that fills jail cells, the old arrest that makes me stare out the window.” When I read this in the poem it just painted the image in my mind and reminded me of how I felt when I would be working late night wanting to go home especially when the customers would walk in to order in the last minutes of the restaurant being…

    • 759 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    To Paint a Water Lily

    • 275 Words
    • 2 Pages

    In the poem “To Paint a Water Lily”, there is surprisingly little written about the lily itself. The poet focuses more on the surroundings of the lily. He may be telling the artist how to paint a lily, but he believes that the key to mastering the painting lies within realizing the lily’s true beauty and understanding the world it lives in.…

    • 275 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Nemesis In HP Lovecraft

    • 904 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The use of image and personification in this poem is especially strong. We can see that in the example of “When the sky was a vaporous flame; I have seen the dark universe yawning.” This is strong imagery, easily evoking an image of an unreal, mystic and ethereal sky, hazing in and out of seeming existence into a nothingness that lies beyond this world. A truly disturbing picture that serves to only strengthen the tone and mood of the piece. Furthermore, the attribution of human…

    • 904 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Broadly speaking, the term ‘housework’ is used to describe the management of the home, which ‘involves a range of activities, the purpose of which is to maintain household members’ (Hatt 1997: 39). Hatt discusses how the industrial revolution and the rise of capitalism created a tidal wave of mass social change; causing production to shift from within the household to the factory. The home is now the site of the ‘reproduction’ of labour, a role which has become strongly gendered; shaped by social policies and ideologies that maintain gender roles(Malos, 1980, Cooke, 2009). There have been a lot of significant changes occurring in the area of housework since the mid 20th century following feminist challenges to the gendered division of labour and social changes that have allowed women more equal opportunities into paid work. However, despite this men have not taken on their fair share of the housework leaving the women to do a ‘second shift’ (Edmond and Fleming, 1975, Craig, 2007). Today the growing answer to the double shift for many middle class families is the paid domestic worker; and as a result of the growing demand for this service, large domestic leaning companies are commoditising domestic labour. Ehrenreich and Hochschild (2003) argue that despite technological advancements and lower standards of upkeep in the home, domestic cleaning companies strive to provide hard intensive domestic labour ‘the old fashioned way’. The home has become a paid workplace where a Taylorist standardised approach to cleaning is obligatory. Low paid domestic work has long been associated with certain ethnic minorities however; globalisation is intensifying such assertions by employing workers from underdeveloped countries who are willing to accept low wage work. These migrant domestic workers are also further exploited in an emotional sense. In this essay I am going to analyse and further discuss…

    • 1504 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Coltrane, S., and Ishii-Kuntz, M. (1992). "Men 's housework: a life course perspective." journal of marriage and the family 54:43–58.…

    • 2904 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout the poem the poet makes frequent use of the senses. Sounds are very prominent in this poem, as they bring the place to life. For example, ‘ringing shrilly’, or ‘clashed on the shore’. In the former example, at the start of the second stanza, this phrase is significant, as it effectively kills the jovial, relaxed mood from the first stanza, and creates a rather more eerie one. This mood does not last long however, and with the phrase ‘a veil of purple vapour flowed’, the jovial mood is restored. This image is one of several, along with ‘like sapphire glowed’, and ‘the saffron beach, all diamond drops’, which contain royal and rich connotations, emphasising how special this place is for the poet, that he would go as far as to compare it to expensive, valuable things like diamonds or saffron. The tranquil mood is upheld throughout by words of gentle movement such as ‘flowed’, ‘trailed’, or ‘wagged’. These all bring the place to life and give it a peaceful, tranquil atmosphere.…

    • 749 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    750Per

    • 769 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Today out of all days I had decided to clean out my attic upstairs. As I go upstairs, I take a quick pause and sneeze. Feeling the dust tickling my nostrils, I glance at everything surrounding me, Piles of boxes, books, big bags filled with old clothes, photo albums stacked like a tower nearly clasping. It was a mess. Not the biggest mess in the world or a horrific scene of a hoarder’s mess, but it was still a mess. All the attic needed was dusting, sweeping, and reorganizing. Quickly, I go back downstairs heading my way towards the kitchen, and I reach for my grandmas red apron and put it on. Once I’ve gotten my apron on tightly, I go under the sink cabinet and get a bottle of Pine-Sol, some Chlorox disinfecting wipes, and a dry old sponge. Once I have gotten all my cleaning utensils, I put them in an blue bucket. I almost forgot! I also needed a duster. I go to the laundry room get the duster and rush back to the kitchen. Before going upstairs, I make sure and double check if I have all the items I need making sure so I wouldn’t have to make another trip to come back downstairs.…

    • 769 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Noticeably, the setting and visual aspects introduced in the poem provide an insight to not only the mood, but the meaning as well. In the poem, Longfellow…

    • 987 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The word Zen emphasizes the value of meditation. In order to experience something, you must understand it properly first. For meditation, having a peaceful and silent environment is necessary so one would have the tools to clear their mind of all irrelevant noise. The Water Moon Monastery in Taipei, Taiwan has the ideal location for Buddhist monks to reside in it, because of its environment surrounding it. At the entrance, there are two walls made up of concrete that are of different lengths and they help to divide the city from the sacred monastery. The entrance also has an eighty-meter pond that is placed to symbolize a mind that is clear and reflects the truth. The concrete walls are made up of the two major Zen Sutras which were…

    • 1002 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays